To provide a noise suppressing method and apparatus capable of achieving high-quality noise suppression using a lower amount of operations. noise contained in an input signal is suppressed by transforming the input signal into frequency-domain signals; integrating bands of the frequency-domain signals to determine integrated frequency-domain signals; determining estimated noise based on the integrated frequency-domain signals; determining spectral gains based on the estimated noise and said integrated frequency-domain signals; and weighting said frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains.
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20. A noise suppressing method, comprising:
transforming an input signal into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution, frequency-domain signals comprising a plurality of frequency components, the input signal including a speech or audio signal;
determining spectral gains with based on said frequency-domain signals, wherein the number of said spectral gains is less than the number of frequency components in said frequency-domain signals; and
weighting said frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains to suppress noise contained in the input signal, wherein at least one of the spectral gains is employed for a plurality of said frequency components.
22. A noise suppressing apparatus for suppressing noise, comprising:
a transformer for transforming an input signal into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution, the input signal including a speech or audio signal;
a band integrator for integrating said frequency-domain signals to determine subband signals with a second frequency resolution that is smaller than the first frequency resolution;
a spectral gain generator for determining a single spectral gain for each subband signal based on the respective subband signal; and
a multiplier for weighting said frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains;
wherein said multiplier employs at least one of said spectral gains for a plurality of said frequency-domain signals.
1. A noise suppressing method for suppressing noise contained in an input signal including a speech or audio signal, comprising the steps of:
transforming the input signal into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution;
integrating the frequency-domain signals to determine subband signals with a second frequency resolution that is smaller than the first frequency resolution, wherein each subband signal comprises a plurality of frequency-domain signals;
determining estimated noise with the second frequency resolution based on the subband signals;
determining a single spectral gain for each subband signal based on the estimated noise; and
weighting said frequency-domain signals by said spectral gains wherein the single spectral gain is commonly used for all the plurality of frequency-domain signals of the same subband signal.
24. A non-transitory computer readable storage device embodying a computer program for performing a signal process in which, to suppress noise contained in an input signal including a speech or audio signal, the input signal is transformed into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution and comprising a plurality of frequency components, spectral gains are determined based on subband signals, and said frequency-domain signals are weighted by the spectral gains, said computer program which when executed by a computer causes a computer to execute:
a process for integrating said frequency-domain signals to determine subband signals with a second frequency resolution that is smaller than the first frequency resolution;
a process for determining, for each single subband signal, a single spectral gain based on the respective subband signal; and
a process for employing at least one of the spectral gains to weight a plurality of said frequency-domain signals.
10. A noise suppressing apparatus for suppressing noise contained in an input signal including a speech or audio signal, comprising:
a transformer for transforming the input signal into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution;
a band integrator for integrating the frequency-domain signals to determine subband signals with a second frequency resolution that is smaller than the first frequency resolution, wherein each subband signal comprises a plurality of frequency-domain signals;
a noise estimator for determining estimated noise with the second frequency resolution based on the subband signals;
a spectral gain generator for determining a single spectral gain for each subband signal based on the estimated noise and the respective subband signal; and
a multiplier for weighting said frequency-domain signals by using said spectral gains wherein the single spectral gain is commonly used for all the plurality of frequency-domain signals of the same subband signal.
15. A non-transitory computer readable storage device embodying a computer program for performing signal processing to suppress noise contained in an input signal including a speech or audio signal, which when executed by a computer causes a computer to execute:
a process for transforming the input signal into frequency-domain signals with a first frequency resolution;
a process for integrating the frequency-domain signals to determine subband signals with a second frequency resolution that is smaller than the first frequency resolution, wherein each subband signal comprises a plurality of frequency-domain signals;
a process for determining estimated noise with the second frequency resolution based on the subband signals;
a process for determining a single spectral gain for each subband signal based on the estimated noise; and
a process for weighting said frequency-domain signals by said spectral gains wherein the single spectral gain is commonly used for all the plurality of frequency-domain signals of the same subband signal.
2. The noise suppressing method according to
correcting said estimated noise to determine corrected estimated noise by multiplying each of the estimated noise by a predetermined value; and
determining the spectral gains based on the corrected estimated noise and said subband signals.
3. The noise suppressing method according to
correcting the amplitude of said frequency-domain signals to determine amplitude corrected signals by multiplying each of said frequency-domain signals by a weight predetermined based on an amplitude-frequency response; and
integrating the amplitude-corrected signals to determine the subband signals.
4. The noise suppressing method according to
correcting the phase of said frequency-domain signals to determine phase corrected signals by rotating a phase of each frequency-domain signal by an angle predetermined based on a phase-frequency response; and
transforming the result in which said amplitude corrected signals are weighted by said spectral gains and combined with said phase corrected signals into time-domain signals.
5. The noise suppressing method according to
removing an offset of the input signal to determine an offset-free signal; and
transforming the offset-free signal into frequency-domain signals.
6. The noise suppressing method according to
7. The noise suppressing method according to
8. The noise suppressing method according to
9. The noise suppressing method according to
11. The noise suppressing apparatus according to
an estimated noise modifier for correcting said estimated noise to determine corrected estimated noise by multiplying each of the estimated noise by a predetermined value; and
a spectral gain generator for determining spectral gains based on the corrected estimated noise and the respective subband signals.
12. The noise suppressing apparatus according to
an amplitude modifier for correcting the amplitude of said frequency-domain signals to determine amplitude corrected signals by multiplying each of said frequency-domain signals by a weight predetermined based on an amplitude-frequency response; and
a band integrator for integrating the amplitude-corrected signals to determine said subband signals with the second frequency resolution.
13. The noise suppressing apparatus according to
a phase modifier for correcting the phase of said frequency-domain signals to determine phase corrected signals by rotating a phase of each of said frequency-domain signals by an angle predetermined based on a phase-frequency response; and
an inverse transformer for transforming the result in which said amplitude corrected signals are weighted by said spectral gains and combined with said phase corrected signals into time-domain signals.
14. The noise suppressing apparatus according to
an offset remover for removing an offset of the input signal to determine an offset-free signal; and
a transformer for transforming the offset-free signal into frequency domain signals.
16. The computer readable storage device for suppressing noise according to
a process for correcting said estimated noise to determine corrected estimated noise by multiplying each of the estimated noise by a predetermined value; and
a process for determining spectral gains based on the corrected estimated noise and said subband signals.
17. The computer readable storage device for suppressing noise according to
a process for correcting the amplitude of said frequency-domain signals to determine amplitude corrected signals by multiplying the amplitude of each of said frequency-domain signals by a weight predetermined based on an amplitude-frequency response; and
a process for integrating the amplitude-corrected signals to determine the subband signals.
18. The computer readable storage device for suppressing noise according to
a process for correcting the phase of said frequency-domain signals to determine phase corrected signals by rotating a phase of each of said frequency-domain signals by an angle predetermined based on a phase-frequency response; and
a process for transforming the result in which said amplitude corrected signals are weighted by said spectral gains and combined with said phase corrected signals into time-domain signals.
19. The computer readable storage device for suppressing noise according to
a process for removing an offset of the input signal to determine an offset-free signal; and
a process for transforming the offset-free signal into frequency-domain signals.
21. The noise suppressing method according to
further comprising:
determining subband signals with a second frequency resolution based on the frequency-domain signals, wherein the second frequency resolution is smaller than the first frequency resolution;
determining estimated noise based on said subband signals; and
determining spectral gains based on said subband signals and said estimated noise.
23. The noise suppressing apparatus according to
a noise estimator for determining estimated noise, each of which is common to each of said subband signals,
wherein said spectral gain generator determines spectral gains based on the estimated noise, said spectral gains having the same frequency resolution as said subband signals.
25. The computer readable storage device according to
a process for determining estimated noise each of which is common to each of said integrated frequency-domain signals; and
a process for determining said spectral gains based on the estimated noise, wherein said estimated noise has a lower frequency resolution than that of said frequency-domain signals.
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The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for suppressing noise to reduce the noise superimposed on a desired audio signal as well as to a computer program for use in signal processing of noise suppression.
A noise suppressor (noise suppressing system) is a system for suppressing noise superimposed on a desired audio signal, and typically estimates the power spectrum of the noise component using the input signal that was converted into frequency domain, and subtracts this estimated power spectrum from the input signal to thereby suppress the noise mixed in the desired audio signal. When the power spectrum of the noise component is continuously estimated, it is possible to deal with the suppression of irregular noise. A conventional noise suppressor is disclosed in patent document 1 (Japanese Patent Application Laid-open 204175/2002), for example.
Usually, a digital signal that has been obtained by analog-to-digital (AD) conversion of an output signal from a microphone that corrects speech waves is supplied as an input signal to a noise suppressor. Mostly, in general a high-pass filter is disposed between AD conversion and a noise suppressor in order to suppress a low-frequency component that is added during speech collection with a microphone or during AD conversion. An example of such a configuration is disclosed in patent document 2 (U.S. Pat. No. 5,659,622).
Supplied to input terminal 11 is a noisy speech signal (a signal that contains a desired speech signal and noise) as a sequence of sample values. The noisy speech signal samples are supplied to high-pass filter 17 where the low-pass component is suppressed, and then are supplied to frame divider 1. Suppression of the low-pass component is an essential process in order to maintain the linearity of the input noisy speech and to present high enough signal processing performance. Frame divider 1 divides the noisy speech signal samples into frames of a specified number of samples and transmits them to windowing processor 2. Windowing processor 2 multiplies the divided frame of noisy speech samples by a window function and transmits the result to Fourier transformer 3.
Fourier transformer 3 performs a Fourier transform on the windowed, noisy speech samples to divide the samples into a plurality of frequency components and multiplex the amplitude values and supplies them to estimated noise calculator 52, spectral gain generator 82 and multiplex multiplier 16. The phases are transmitted to invert Fourier transformer 9. Estimated noise calculator 52 estimates the noise for each of the supplied multiple frequency components and transmits them to spectral gain generator 82. As an example of noise estimation, there is a method of estimating the noise component by weighting the noisy speech based on the past signal-to-noise ratio, the detail being described in patent document 1.
Spectral gain generator 82 generates individual spectral gains for multiple frequency components, in order to produce enhanced speech with noise suppressed by multiplying the noisy speech by the coefficients. As one example of generating spectral gains, the least mean square short period spectrum amplitude method in which the mean square power of enhanced speech is minimized has been widely used. Details are described in patent document 1.
The spectral gains generated for individual frequencies are supplied to multiplex multiplier 16. Multiplex multiplier 16 multiplies the noisy speech supplied from Fourier transformer 3 and the spectral gain supplied from spectral gain generator 82 for every frequency, and transmits the products as the amplitudes of the enhanced speech to inverse Fourier transformer 9. Inverse Fourier transformer 9 performs inverse Fourier transformation making use of the enhanced speech amplitudes supplied from multiplex multiplier 16 and the phases of the noisy speech supplied from Fourier transformer 3 and supplies the result as enhanced speech signal samples to frame synthesizer 10. This frame synthesizer 10 synthesizes output speech samples of the current frame using the enhanced speech samples of the neighboring frame and outputs the result to output terminal 12.
High-pass filter 17 suppresses the frequency components in the vicinity of the direct current, and usually permits components having frequencies equal to or greater than 100 Hz to 120 Hz to pass through as they are without suppression. Though high-pass filter 17 can be configured of either a finite impulse response (FIR) type filter or an infinite impulse response (IIR) type filter, usually the latter is used because a sharp passband end characteristic is needed. It is known that the transfer function of an IIR type filter is represented by a rational function and the sensitivity of the denominator coefficient is markedly high. Accordingly, when high-pass filter 17 is realized by finite word length operations, it is necessary to use frequent double precision operations in order to achieve high enough precision. So there has been the problem that the amount of operations becomes great. In contrast, if high-pass filter 17 is omitted in order to reduce the amount of operations, it is difficult to maintain the linearity of the input signal, hence it is impossible to achieve high-quality noise suppression.
Also, in estimated noise calculator 52, noise is estimated for all the frequency components supplied from Fourier transformer 3, and in spectral gain generator 82, spectral gains corresponding to these are determined. Therefore, if the block length (frame length) for the Fourier transform is made longer in order to improve frequency resolution, the number of samples constituting each block becomes greater, resulting in the problem that the amount of operations increases.
The object of the present invention is to provide a noise suppressing method and apparatus capable of achieving high-quality noise suppression using a lower amount of operations.
A noise suppressing method according to the present invention includes the steps of: transforming an input signal into frequency-domain signals; integrating bands of the frequency-domain signals to determine integrated frequency-domain signals; determining estimated noise based on the integrated frequency-domain signals; determining spectral gains based on the estimated noise and the aforesaid integrated frequency-domain signals; and weighting the aforesaid frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains.
Also, a noise suppressing apparatus according to the present invention includes: a transformer for transforming an input signal into frequency-domain signals; a band integrator for integrating bands of the frequency-domain signals to determine integrated frequency-domain signals; a noise estimator for determining estimated noise based on the integrated frequency-domain signals; a spectral gain generator for determining spectral gains based on the estimated noise and the aforesaid integrated frequency-domain signals; and a multiplier for weighting the aforesaid frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains.
Further, a computer program that performs signal processing for suppressing noise causes a computer to execute: a process of transforming the input signal into frequency-domain signals; a process of integrating bands of the frequency-domain signals to determine integrated frequency-domain signals; a process of determining estimated noise based on the integrated frequency-domain signals; a process of determining spectral gains based on the estimated noise and the aforesaid integrated frequency-domain signals; and a process of weighting aforesaid frequency-domain signals by the spectral gains.
In particular, the method, apparatus and computer program for suppressing noise of the present invention are characterized by execution of suppression of low-pass components for the signal after the Fourier transform. More specifically, the invention is characterized by inclusion of an amplitude modifier for suppressing low-pass components for the amplitudes of the Fourier transformed output and a phase modifier for performing phase correction corresponding to amplitude deformation of low-pass components for the phase of the Fourier transformed output.
Also, the invention is characterized in that noise estimation and generation of spectral gains are performed for multiple frequency components. More specifically, the invention is characterized by inclusion of a band integrator for integrating part of multiple frequency components.
According to the present invention, it is possible to achieve high quality noise suppression with a lower amount of operations, by means of single-precision operations because the amplitude of the signal that was converted into frequency domain is multiplied by a constant and a constant is added to the phase. Further, according to the present invention, noise estimation and generation of noise coefficients are performed for a lower number of frequency components than the number of samples that constitute each block of Fourier transform, so that it is possible to reduce the amount of operations.
The configuration shown in
In
Amplitude modifier 18 and phase modifier 19 are provided to apply frequency response of a high-pass filter to the signal that was converted into frequency domain. Specifically, in
The output from amplitude modifier 18 is supplied to band integrator 53 and multiplex multiplier 161. Band integrator 53 integrates signal samples corresponding to multiple frequency components to reduce the total number and transmits the result to estimated noise calculator 52 and spectral gain generator 82. Upon integration, multiple signal samples are added up and the sum is divided by the number of the added samples to determine the mean value. Estimated noise modifier 54 corrects the estimated noise supplied from estimated noise calculator 52 and transmits the result to spectral gain generator 82.
The most essential operation for making corrections in estimated noise modifier 54 is to multiply all the frequency components by an identical constant. Also, different constants may be used depending on the frequency. A special case is that the constants for particular frequencies are set at 1.0; that is, the data at the frequencies for which the constant is set at 1.0 is not corrected and the data for the frequencies other than that is corrected. This means that selective correction can be made depending on the frequency. It is possible to make correction other than this, by adding a different value depending on the frequency, by performing a non-linear process or the like.
By making the correction as above, it is possible to maintain the speech quality of the enhanced speech to be output high by reducing the deviation from the true value of the estimated noise value generated by band integration. For the aftermentioned band integrating method, it has been made clear by informal subjective evaluation that multiplication of the estimated noise in the band equal to or higher than 1000 Hz by a constant of 0.7 is suitable in sampling at 8 kHz.
The output from phase modifier 19 is transmitted to inverse Fourier transformer 9. The operation from this point forward is the same as that described with
In the present invention, these L/2 samples are partly integrated to reduce the number of independent frequency components. To do this, a greater number of samples are integrated into one sample in the higher frequency range. That is, many frequency components are integrated into one as their frequencies become higher, that is, the band is divided unequally. As an example of such unequal division, the octave division in which the band becomes narrower toward the lower band side having powers of 2, the critical band division in which the band is divided based on the human auditory characteristics, and others are known. Concerning the details of the critical band, non-patent document 1 (pp. 158 to 164 in PSYCHOACOUSTICS, 2ND ED., SPRINGER, January 1999) can be referred to.
In particular, the band division, based on a critical band, has been widely used since it presents high consistency with human auditory characteristics. In 4 kHz band, the critical band consists of, in total, 18 bands. In contrast, in the present invention, the lower range is divided into narrower bands than those in the case of the critical band as shown in
The integration of frequency components as above makes it possible to reduce the number of independent frequency components from 128 to 32. The correspondence between the 128 frequency components after Fourier transform and the 32 frequency components after integration is shown in Table 1. Since the bandwidth for one frequency component is 4000/128=31.25 Hz, the corresponding frequencies calculated based on this is shown in the right-most column.
TABLE 1
Generation of unequally divided sub-bands
by frequency component integration
Band
Frequency component No.
Frequency
No.
(the number of components)
[Hz]
0
0(1)
0·31
1
1(1)
31·62
. . .
. . .
. . .
12
12(1)
375·406
13
13-14(2)
406·469
14
15-16(2)
469·531
15
17-18(2)
531·594
16
19-20(2)
594·656
17
21-22(2)
656·719
18
23-24(2)
719·781
19
25-26(2)
781·844
20
27-29(3)
844·938
21
30-32(3)
938·1031
22
33-36(4)
1031·1156
23
37-42(6)
1156·1344
24
43-48(6)
1344·1531
25
49-56(8)
1531·1781
26
57-65(9)
1781·2063
27
66-75(10)
2063·2375
28
76-87(12)
2375·2750
29
88-101(14)
2750·3188
30
102-119(18)
3188·3750
31
120-128(9)
3750·4000
(fs = 8 kHz)
It is important in the operation of band integrator 53 that frequency components are not integrated for the frequencies below approximately 400 Hz. If frequency components in this frequency range are integrated, the resolution is lowered resulting in degradation of speech quality. On the other hand, in the frequencies above about 1156 Hz, frequency components may be integrated in conformity with the critical band. When the band of the input signal becomes wider, it is necessary to maintain speech quality by increasing the block length L of Fourier transform. This is because the bandwidth for one frequency component increases in the aforementioned band equal to or lower than 400 Hz where no frequency components are integrated, causing degradation of resolution. For example, using the case where L=256 and the bandwidth is 4 kHz as the reference, it is possible to maintain the speech quality at the same level as in the case with a bandwidth of 4 kHz even when a broader band signal is used, by determining the block length L of the Fourier transform so that L>fs/31.25 holds. When L is selected as a power of 2 in accordance with this rule, L is determined as L=512 when 8 kHz<fs=16 kHz, L=1024 when 16 kHz<fs=32 kHz and L=2048 when 32 kHz<fs=64 kHz. An example corresponding to Table 1, where fs=16 kHz is shown in Table 2. Table 2 shows one example, and those having band integration boundaries slightly different present the same effect.
TABLE 2
Generation of unequally divided sub-bands
by frequency component integration
Band
Frequency component No.
Frequency
No.
(the number of components)
[Hz]
0
0(1)
0·31
1
1(1)
31·62
. . .
. . .
. . .
12
12(1)
375·406
13
13-14(2)
406·469
14
15-16(2)
469·531
15
17-18(2)
531·594
16
19-20(2)
594·656
17
21-22(2)
656·719
18
23-24(2)
719·781
19
25-26(2)
781·844
20
27-29(3)
844·938
21
30-32(3)
938·1031
22
33-36(4)
1031·1156
23
37-42(6)
1156·1344
24
43-48(6)
1344·1531
25
49-56(8)
1531·1781
26
57-65(9)
1781·2063
27
66-75(10)
2063·2375
28
76-87(12)
2375·2750
29
88-101(14)
2750·3188
30
102-119(18)
3188·3750
31
119-140(21)
3750·4406
32
140-169(29)
4406·5313
33
169-204(35)
5313·6406
34
204-245(41)
6406·7688
35
245-255(10)
7688·8000
(fs = 16 kHz)
The number of the spectral gains classified by frequency is equal to the number of bands integrated in band integrator 53. In other words, a spectral gain corresponding to each sub-band that was integrated by band integrator 53 is separated by demultiplexer 1603.
In the example shown in
In the example of Table 1, since K=128, common spectral gains are transmitted to each of multipliers 160127 to 160129, multipliers 160130 to 160132, multipliers 160133 to 160136, multipliers 160137 to 160142, multipliers 160143 to 160148, multipliers 160149 to 160156, multipliers 160157 to 160165, multipliers 160166 to 160175, multipliers 160176 to 160187, multipliers 160188 to 1601101, multipliers 1601102 to 1601119, and multipliers 1601120 to 1601128. Independent spectral gains are transmitted to multipliers 16010 to 160126, individually. Multipliers 16010 to 1601K−1 each multiply the input corrected noisy speech spectrum and input spectral gain and output the result to multiplexer 1604. Multiplexer 1604 multiplexes the input signals to output an enhanced speech amplitude spectrum.
[Math 1]
It is also a widely used practice for parts of two consecutive frames to be overlapped and windowed. When the overlap length is assumed to be 50% of the frame length, for t=0, 1, . . . , K/2−1,
yn(t)bar (t=0, 1, . . . , K−1) obtained from the following equations:
[Math 2]
is output from windowing processor 2. For a real number signal, a horizontally symmetrical window function is used. Further, the window function is designed so that the input signal and the output signal when the spectral gain is set at 1 will correspond to each other without calculation error. This means that w(t)+w(t+K/2)=1.
Hereinbelow, description of an example follows in which reference is made to a case in which windowing is done by overlapping consecutive two frames by 50 percent. As w(t), the Hanning window represented by the following equation can be used, for example.
Other than this, various window functions such as the Hamming window, the Kaiser window, the Blackman window and the like are known. The windowed output, yn(t)bar is supplied to offset remover 22, where the offset is removed. The detail of offset removal is the same as that already described with reference to
Multiplex multiplier 13 calculates a noisy speech power spectrum based on the amplitude-corrected, noisy speech amplitude spectrum and transmits it to band integrator 53. Band integrator 53 partly integrates the noisy speech power spectrum so as to reduce the number of independent frequency components, then transmits the result to estimated noise calculator 5, frequency-classified SNR (signal to noise ratio) calculator 6 and weighted noisy speech calculator 14. The operation of band integrator 53 is the same as that already described with reference to
Frequency-classified SNR calculator 6 calculates SNRs for individual frequency bands based on the input noisy speech power spectrum and estimated noise power spectrum, and supplies the results as aposteriori SNRs to estimated apriori SNR calculator 7 and spectral gain generator 8.
Estimated apriori SNR calculator 7 estimates apriori SNRs based on the input aposteriori SNRs and the corrected spectral gains supplied from spectral gain modifier 15 and transmits the result as estimated apriori SNRs to spectral gain generator 8. Spectral gain generator 8 receives as its input the aposteriori SNRs, the estimated apriori SNRs and the speech non-existence probability supplied from speech non-existence probability memory 21, generates spectral gains based on these inputs, and transmits the results as the spectral gains to spectral gain modifier 15.
Spectral gain modifier 15 corrects the spectral gains using the input estimated apriori SNRs and spectral gains and supplies corrected spectral gains Gn(k)bar to multiplex multiplier 161. Multiplex multiplier 161 weights the corrected, noisy speech amplitude spectra supplied from Fourier transformer 3 by way of amplitude modifier 18 using corrected spectral gains Gn(k)bar supplied from spectral gain modifier 15 to thereby determine enhanced speech amplitude spectra |Xn(k)|bar, and transfers them to inverse Fourier transformer 9. |Xn(k)|bar is represented by the following equation.
[Math 4]
|
Here, Hn(k) is a correction gain in amplitude modifier 18, having characteristics simulating the amplitude frequency response of high-pass filter 17.
Inverse Fourier transformer 9 multiplies the enhanced speech amplitude |Xn(k)|bar supplied from multiplex multiplier 161 by the corrected noisy speech phase spectrum arg Yn(k)+arg Hn(k) supplied from Fourier transformer 3 via phase modifier 19 to determine enhanced speech Xn(k)bar. That is,
[Math 5]
is executed. Here, arg Hn(k) is the corrected phase in phase modifier 19, having characteristics that simulate the phase frequency response of high-pass filter 17.
The obtained Xn(k)bar is inverse Fourier transformed to produce a time-domain sample sequence (t=0, 1, . . . , K−1) consisting of K samples xn(t)bar for one frame and output it to windowing processor 20, where it is multiplied with window function w(t). Signal xn(t)bar that is windowed by w(t) for input signal xn(t) (t=0, 1, . . . , K/2−1) is given as the following equation.
[Math 6]
It is also a widely used practice that consecutive two frames are partly overlapped to window. If the overleap length is assumed to be 50 percent of the frame length, for t=0, 1, . . . , K/2−1,
yn(t)bar (t=0, 1, . . . , K−1), obtained by the following equations is output from windowing processor 20 and transmitted to frame synthesizer 10.
[Math 7]
Frame synthesizer 10 extracts K/2 samples from each of the neighboring two frames of xn(t)bar, and
by the following equation
[Math 8]
{circumflex over (x)}n(t)=
enhanced speech xn(t)hut is obtained. The obtained enhanced speech xn(t)hut (t=0, 1, . . . , K−1) is output from frame synthesizer 10 and transmitted to output terminal 12.
Multiplex non-linear processor 1405, based on the SNRs supplied from frequency-classified SNR calculator 1402, calculates a weight coefficient vector and outputs the weight coefficient vector to multiplex multiplier 1404. Multiplex multiplier 1404 calculates the product of the noisy speech power strum supplied from band integrator 53 in
Here, λn−1(k) is the estimated noise power spectratored in the preceding frame. Multiplexer 1424 multiplexes transmitted M frequency-classified SNRs and transmits the result to multiplex non-linear processor 1405 in
Referring next to
given by the following equation:
Here, a and b are arbitrary real numbers.
In each of non-linear processors 14850 to 1485M-1 in
The weight coefficients, which are used in multiplex multiplier 1404 in
Frequency-classified estimated noise calculators 5040 to 504M-1 calculate frequency-classified estimated noise power spectra from the frequency-band-classified weighted noisy speech power spectra supplied from demultiplexer 501, the frequency-band-classified noisy speech power spectra supplied from demultiplexer 502 and the count value supplied from counter 4 in
On the other hand, update controller 520 is supplied with the count value, the frequency-classified noisy speech power spectrum and frequency-classified estimated noise power spectrum. Update controller 520 constantly outputs “1” until the count value reaches a predetermined set value. After the predetermined set value is reached, update controller 520 outputs “1” when the input noisy speech signal is determined to be noise and outputs “0” otherwise, and transmits the result to counter 5049, switch 5044 and shifter register 5045. Switch 5044 closes and opens the circuit when the signal supplied from update controller 520 is “1” and “0”, respectively. Counter 5049 increases the count value when the signal supplied from update controller 520 is “1” and does not change the count value when the supplied signal is “0”. Shift register 5045 picks up one sample of the signal samples supplied from switch 5044 when the signal supplied from update controller 520 is “1” and at the same time shifts the stored values in the internal register to the neighboring register. Supplied to minimum-value selector 5047 are the output from counter 5049 and the output from register-length memory 5041.
Minimum-value selector 5047 selects the smaller one form among the supplied count value and register length, and transmits it to divider 5048. Divider 5048 divides the sum of the frequency-classified noisy speech power spectra, supplied from adder 5046, by the smaller one form among the count value and the register length, and outputs the quotient as frequency-classified estimated noise power spectrum λn(k). When Bn(k) (n=0, 1, . . . , N−1) is assumed to be the sample value of the noisy speech power spectrum stored in shift register 5045, λn(k) is given as follows:
Here, N is the smaller value between the count value and the register length. Since the count value monotonously increases starting from zero, the division is done with the count value at the beginning and then is done with the register length. The mean value of the values stored in the shift register is determined by dividing by the register length. Since not many values have been stored in shift register 5045, division is done by the number of the registers in which values have been actually stored. The number of the registers in which values are actually stored is equal to the count value when the count value is smaller than the register length and is equal to the register length when the count value is greater than the register length.
The simplest way of calculating the threshold value is to multiply the frequency-classified estimated noise power spectrum by a constant. Other than this, it is also possible to calculate the threshold value using a high degree polynomial or a non-linear function. Threshold memory 5206 stores the threshold output from threshold calculator 5207 and outputs the threshold stored in the preceding frame to comparator 5205. Comparator 5205 compares the threshold value supplied from threshold memory 5206 with the frequency-classified noisy speech power spectrum supplied from demultiplexer 502 in
In this way, update controller 520 outputs “1” not only for the initial state and silent periods but also when the noisy speech power is low even in non-silent periods. That is, estimated noise is updated. Since the threshold value is calculated for every frequency, it is possible to update estimated noise for every frequency.
Corrected spectral gains Gn(k)bar (k=0, 1, . . . , M−1) supplied from spectral gain modifier 15 in
The other terminal of adder 708 is supplied with −1, and the added result γn(k)−1 is transmitted to multiplexed limiter 701. Multiplexed limiter 701 performs an operation on the added result γn(k)−1, supplied from adder 708, by value range limit operator p[•] and transmits the result P[γn(k)−1] to adder 707 as temporary estimated SNR 921. Here, P[x] is defined as the following equation.
Supplied also to multiplexed weighting accumulator 707 is weight 923 from weight memory 703. Multiplexed weighting accumulator 707 determines estimated apriori SNR 924 based on the supplied temporary estimated SNR 921, past SNR 922 and weight 923. When weight 923 is represented by a and the estimated apriori SNR is represented by ζ n(k)hut, C n(k)hut is calculated by the following equation.
[Math 13]
{circumflex over (ξ)}n(k)=αγn-1(k)
Here, G2−I(k)γ−I(k)bar=I
It is assumed that the frame number is n, the frequency number is k, γn(k) represents the frequency-classified aposteriori SNR supplied from frequency-classified SNR calculator 6 in
ηn(k)=ξn(k)hut/(1−q)
vn(k)=(ηn(k)γn(k))/(1+ηn(k)).
MMSE STSA gain function value calculator 811, based on aposteriori SNR γn(k) supplied from frequency-classified SNR calculator 6 in
Here, I0(z) is the 0-th order modified Bessel function and I1(z) is the 1st order modified Bessel function. Reference to the modified Bessel functions is found in non-patent document 3 (page 374G, Iwanami Shoten, Sugaku-jiten, 1985).
Generalized likelihood ratio calculator 812, based on aposteriori SNR γn(k) supplied from frequency-classified SNR calculator 6 in
Spectral gain calculator 814 calculates a spectral gain for every frequency, from MMSE STSA gain function value Gn(k) supplied from MMSE STSA gain function value calculator 811 and generalized likelihood ratio Λn(k) supplied from generalized likelihood ratio calculator 812, and outputs the result to spectral gain modifier 15 in
Instead of calculating SNRs for individual frequency bands, it is also possible to determine a common SNR for a broadened band consisting of multiple frequency bands and to use it.
Referring next to
On the other hand, minimum-spectral-gain memory 1592 supplies the lower limit of the spectral gains that are stored to maximum-value selector 1591. Maximum-value selector 1591 compares the frequency-band-classified spectral gain supplied from demultiplexer 1503 in
Although in all the embodiments described heretofore the least mean square error short period spectrum amplitude method has been assumed as the scheme for suppressing noise, other methods may also be applied. Examples of such methods include the Wiener filtering method, disclosed in non-patent document 4 (PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE, VOL. 67, No. 12, PP. 1586-1604, December, 1979), a spectraubtracting method disclosed in non-patent document 5 (IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ACOUSTICS, SPEECH, AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, VOL. 27, No. 2, PP. 113-129, April, 1979). However, description of detailed configurational examples of these is omitted.
The noise suppressing apparatus of each of the aforementioned embodiments can be configured by a computer apparatus made up of a memory device for storing programs, a control portion equipped with input keys and switches, a display device such as an LCD or the like and a control device that receives input from the control portion and controls the operation of each part. The operation in the noise suppressing apparatus of each of the aforementioned embodiments can be realized by letting the control device execute the program stored in memory. The program may be stored beforehand in memory or may be written in CD-ROM or any other recording medium that the user prefers. It is also possible to provide the program by way of a network.
Sugiyama, Akihiko, Kato, Masanori
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